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Hi all,
Around 4 years have passed since the last release of Wee.
What is Wee?
============
Wee is a Seaside-inspired [1] web-framework for building highly-dynamic
component-based web-applications.
What's new?
===========
* 100% Rack based
* Support for continuations
* JQuery AJAX support
* Ruby 1.9 ready
Distinctive Features
====================
Wee is not just another web framework. It is completely different.
Continuations
-------------
You can use continuations to model the page flow of the your
application, in the same way as you'd call a method in a GUI
application. Continuations are optional; nothing in Wee depends on them.
Example:
# you can write code like this:
if callcc YesNoMessageBox.new('Really?')
# do something
else
# something else
end
Without continuations one has to use (ugly) Continuation Passing Style
(CPS):
call YesNoMessageBox.new('Really?') do |res|
if res
# do something
else
# something else
end
end
Backtracking
------------
Backtracking means that the user can naturally use the browsers back
button despite Wee's statefulness. This is not taken for granted for
stateful web frameworks. Behind the scenes, Wee keeps multiple states
of the application around with only little help by the programmer.
Components
----------
Contrary to the widely used model/view/controller (MVC) paradigm, Wee
tighly couples the controller and the view within a *component*.
Components itself are highly decoupled from the rest of the application
and can be reused to construct more complex applications. The powerful
programmatic HTML rendering approach further reduces wasting the
programmers mind by avoiding switching files (controller/view) or
languages (Ruby/HTML). Therefore in Wee everything is written in Ruby.
The programmatic HTML renderer is not just a simple HTML builder, it
provides very powerful methods for easily generating HTML constructs
and registering callbacks. Example:
#
# Generating a <select> tag
#
# select an object from these items
items = [1, 2, 3, 4]
# the labels shown to the user
labels = items.map {|i| i.to_s}
# render it
r.select_list(items).labels(labels).callback {|choosen| p choosen}
# render a multi-select list, with objects 2 and 4 selected
r.select_list(items).multi.labels(labels).selected([2,4])
=== Call/Answer mechanism ===
From callback handlers you can call other components which in turn
replace the current components view. The called component can later
return (or answer) back to the calling componenent. Example:
class YesNoMessageBox < Wee::Component
def initialize(msg)
super()
@msg = msg
end
def render(r)
r.bold(@msg)
r.form do
r.submit_button.value('YES').callback { answer true }
r.space
r.submit_button.value('No').callback { answer false }
end
end
end
# Use call (or callcc) as in the Continuation section above
# to call a component:
call YesNoMessageBox.new('Really?')
The classical Hello World Example
---------------------------------
require 'rubygems' if RUBY_VERSION < "1.9"
require 'wee'
class HelloWorld < Wee::Component
def initialize
super
add_decoration Wee::PageDecoration.new(title="Hello World")
end
def render(r)
r.h1 "Hello World from Wee!"
r.div.onclick_callback { p "clicked" }.with("click here")
end
end
Wee.run(HelloWorld) if __FILE__ == $0
# Now point your browser to http://localhost:2000/
Installation
------------
gem install wee
More Resources
--------------
http://rubyforge.org/projects/weehttp://www.ntecs.de/projects/wee/doc/rdoc/http://github.com/mneumann/wee
Regards,
Michael
[1]: http://www.seaside.st/

Michael Neumann wrote:
> Michael Neumann wrote:>> Hi all,>>>> Around 4 years have passed since the last release of Wee.>> Strange that my posting didn't get through to ruby-talk :(
(I'll try to post again. Sorry for any inconveniences)
Hi all,
Around 4 years have passed since the last release of Wee.
What is Wee?
============
Wee is a Seaside-inspired [1] web-framework for building highly-dynamic
component-based web-applications.
What's new?
===========
* 100% Rack based
* Support for continuations
* JQuery AJAX support
* Ruby 1.9 ready
Distinctive Features
====================
Wee is not just another web framework. It is completely different.
Continuations
-------------
You can use continuations to model the page flow of the your
application, in the same way as you'd call a method in a GUI
application. Continuations are optional; nothing in Wee depends on them.
Example:
# you can write code like this:
if callcc YesNoMessageBox.new('Really?')
# do something
else
# something else
end
Without continuations one has to use (ugly) Continuation Passing Style
(CPS):
call YesNoMessageBox.new('Really?') do |res|
if res
# do something
else
# something else
end
end
Backtracking
------------
Backtracking means that the user can naturally use the browsers back
button despite Wee's statefulness. This is not taken for granted for
stateful web frameworks. Behind the scenes, Wee keeps multiple states
of the application around with only little help by the programmer.
Components
----------
Contrary to the widely used model/view/controller (MVC) paradigm, Wee
tighly couples the controller and the view within a *component*.
Components itself are highly decoupled from the rest of the application
and can be reused to construct more complex applications. The powerful
programmatic HTML rendering approach further reduces wasting the
programmers mind by avoiding switching files (controller/view) or
languages (Ruby/HTML). Therefore in Wee everything is written in Ruby.
The programmatic HTML renderer is not just a simple HTML builder, it
provides very powerful methods for easily generating HTML constructs
and registering callbacks. Example:
#
# Generating a <select> tag
#
# select an object from these items
items = [1, 2, 3, 4]
# the labels shown to the user
labels = items.map {|i| i.to_s}
# render it
r.select_list(items).labels(labels).callback {|choosen| p choosen}
# render a multi-select list, with objects 2 and 4 selected
r.select_list(items).multi.labels(labels).selected([2,4])
Call/Answer mechanism
---------------------
From callback handlers you can call other components which in turn
replace the current components view. The called component can later
return (or answer) back to the calling componenent. Example:
class YesNoMessageBox < Wee::Component
def initialize(msg)
super()
@msg = msg
end
def render(r)
r.bold(@msg)
r.form do
r.submit_button.value('YES').callback { answer true }
r.space
r.submit_button.value('No').callback { answer false }
end
end
end
# Use call (or callcc) as in the Continuation section above
# to call a component:
call YesNoMessageBox.new('Really?')
The classical Hello World Example
=================================
require 'rubygems' if RUBY_VERSION < "1.9"
require 'wee'
class HelloWorld < Wee::Component
def initialize
super
add_decoration Wee::PageDecoration.new(title="Hello World")
end
def render(r)
r.h1 "Hello World from Wee!"
r.div.onclick_callback { p "clicked" }.with("click here")
end
end
Wee.run(HelloWorld) if __FILE__ == $0
# Now point your browser to http://localhost:2000/
Installation
============
gem install wee
More Resources
==============
* Wee at Rubyforge: http://rubyforge.org/projects/wee
* Wee at GitHub: http://github.com/mneumann/wee
* Documentation: http://www.ntecs.de/projects/wee/doc/rdoc/
Regards,
Michael
[1]: http://www.seaside.st/